A union representing more than 2,000 Caesars Windsor employees, on strike since early April, ratified a new three-year contract Monday to end the dispute and put the casino on track to reopen Thursday.

Unifor Local 444 announced that 75% of the workers voted in favor of the latest contract proposal. The deal, reached late Saturday, was the third such agreement between the casino and union leaders; union members voted down the previous two by small margins.

“We’re going to go down there and clean up our picket sites right away,” union president Dave Cassidy told reporters Monday afternoon once the deal was ratified.

Caesars says it will reopen for business at 11 a.m. Thursday. The entire casino complex, including hotel and concert venue, has been closed since the strike began April 5 and numerous entertainment acts were postponed or canceled.

Neither casino nor union representatives could be immediately reached for comment. Information pamphlets about the new contract, photographed by the Windsor Star, say it contains $1,600 signing bonuses and wage increases that average $1,500 in the first year, $1,500 in the second year and $500 in the third year.

Now begins the process of getting @CaesarsWindsor up and running again. @LOCAL444UNIFOR president Dave Cassidy foresees the casino resort being open for customers by the weekend. Says he’s certain customers will return because of what the membership offers. “They’re first class.” pic.twitter.com/S917TUvx8E